22 October 2009

Death's Footprint - Airs Nov. 2

One thing is clear: all of us are going to die. What you may not know is what happens to all those bodies, and the effect they have on the environment. Cemeteries take up thousands of acres of open space. Funeral homes use gallons of toxic chemicals a year. And cremation consumes lots of energy and emits toxins into the environment. Today, many Americans are looking for ways that make their deaths greener. But change is coming slowly. The way we practice death has deep cultural and religious traditions.

This documentary — Death's Footprint — features an embalmer, an undertaker, a Roman Catholic cemeterian, a 34-year-old woman who wants to have her body composted by worms, the sounds of a crematorium and an exploration of the newest, greenest body disposal technique: Resomation

Death's Footprint was produced by Diane Richard and Todd Melby of 2 below zero for Chicago Public Radio. The documentary won an Edward R. Murrow award for best documentary.

No comments:

how to listen

The Listening Lounge airs on KFAI-FM in Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota, USA. The program begins at 7 p.m. Central Time on Wednesday nights. Stream online at KFAI, using the KFAI mobile app or listen on the radio at 90.3 FM Minneapolis or 106.7 FM St. Paul.

fluff

We're not about gooey PR. We're about the real stuff in life. Expressed aurally. The Listening Lounge.